Enter AfroFuture Fest: A Detroit music festival that prides itself as an “immersive, intimate, and intentional space keeping for Afro-Black [futurists]” that presumably ran out of patience waiting for its 40 acres and a mule and took matters into its own hands. How exactly? By reportedly charging white folks twice as much to attend.

No, really.

The New York Times reports that after the horrors of discovering that their beloved Ariel will soon be oiling her scalp before bed, the Liams and McKenzies of the world learned that they’d also be paying $40 to partake in the burgeoning blackstravaganza while the rest of us would only be dropping half as much.

And they had plenty to say about the matter, running the gamut from blind outrage to being mindful of the festival’s intent.

Me having a conversation with a girl about Afrofuture Fest charging Double based on race lines and how that constitutes racism. This girl is a law student who majored in social work ffs 🤦🏻‍♂️. (No particular order) pic.twitter.com/bw9lqR3F7M

But it was rapper Tiny Jag, who was “unknowingly added to the event” and who identifies as “biracial,” who drew a line in the sand and decided she wanted no parts of the Aug. 3 festival after the ticket structure was brought to her attention.

“A non-POC friend of mine brought to my attention that AfroFuture is requiring non-people-of-color to pay twice the amount to attend the festival as POC,” she tweeted. “This does not reflect the views of myself or the Tiny Jag team. I will not be playing this show. I apologize for anyone who may have been triggered or offended.”

And she wasn’t the only one to buckle under the backlash. AfroFuture Youth founder and co-director Numi Ori claims that she and her family, as well as the owner of the venue hosting the festival, have been targeted by a relentless barrage of threats and harassment. As such, she’s made the decision to instead charge anyone who attends a flat rate—with a caveat.

“For safety, not anything else but that, the new ticket structure will be a standard set price across the board of $20,” Ori said, noting a number of right-wing websites had escalated the issue. “However, there will be a suggested donation for non-people of color.”

When asked to explain the purpose behind the previous pricing structure, she told the Times, “Events often designed for marginalized black and brown communities can easily be co-opted by those with cultural, monetary and class privileges. […] Our goal is to ensure that the youth of our community can participate in the building of a more just society, one that specifically promotes equity over equality.”